Gentrification refers to trends in neighborhood development that tend to attract more affluent residents, and in many instances concentrated, upscale commercial investment.

Much of the city's gentrification has clustered in the North Side neighborhoods of
Lincoln Park
and
Lake View,
areas that have retained a large stock of older housing, adjoin
Lake Michigan
and its parallel chain of municipal parks, and permit short
commuting
via mass transit to the downtown Loop. In the late 1950s the city of Chicago initiated a major
urban renewal
project in Lincoln Park, which resulted in considerable housing demolition in the southeastern portion of the neighborhood, especially along North Avenue. Within a few years, however, plans for further clearance met resistance from homeowners and renovators seeking to retain the area's historic ambience.
Old Town
was Chicago's first neighborhood to experience gentrification, as thousands of middle-class house-seekers bought and restored old single-family dwellings, two- and three-flat buildings, and coach houses.

Since the 1970s gentrification has spread to
Wicker Park
and
Logan Square
on the city's near Northwest Side, to River North, the
Near West Side,
and the
South Loop
in central Chicago, and to the Gap in the
Douglas
Community Area on the
South Side.
Much of the residential upgrading in these areas has been initiated by large-scale developers. In Wicker Park, the Near West Side, and River North, the conversion of industrial buildings to residential and commercial uses has been commonplace.

Larry Bennett

Bibliography

Bennett, Larry.
Fragments of Cities: The New American Downtowns and Neighborhoods.
1990.

Suttles, Gerald D.
The Man-Made City: The Land-Use Confidence Game in Chicago.
1990.